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Everything posted by NickDG
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All BASE jumps are dangerous so either, if prepared for correctly . . . NicK
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The most important elevator tip is to send it back down before you jump. And don’t get greedy as they’ll hold only so many . . . We tried five (two inside and three on top) and that’s too many . . . ! NicK
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>>the only movie where Deborah did a nude scene. She looked good.
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In a City Where Nobody’s Been Popped, Lately . . . “Getting arrested for BASE jumping is liner to your location and proportional to what’s going-on there. Sometimes, if the heats off, everybody shakes their heads and laughs and you walk with a hand slap, unless they see you again.” That’s something I wrote 14 years ago, but that was before the war . . . Nick D
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Not in America, but . . . Steve, BASE 344, is an American living in Panama in 1994. His apartment is on the 19th floor and he makes many jumps from his balcony, and many more around the city. The police never bothered him, but they did like to watch. Nick
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Old jumpers who went to the Big House
NickDG replied to steve1's topic in Skydiving History & Trivia
I remember Chris is engaged while at Lake Elsinore, and SHE says, is it Vickie or Nancy?, I'm not sure . . . ? "Lose twenty pounds before the wedding . . . or no wedding," so he's going around the DZ saying, "I can't get the munchies, I can't get the munchies . . ." Nick -
What Space said and . . . The dictionary says “Nimbus” is: “A radiant light that usually appears in the form of a circle or halo about or over the head.” The Nimbus, built by ParaFlite, came out in 1984, and in three sizes. Nimbus Beta, 184 sq ft. Nimbus, 223 sq ft. (Sounds like the one you have.) Nimbus XL, 265 sq ft. It’s all F-111 and the lines are 600 lb Dacron. I remember the Nimbus opened hard, then ParaFlite did something to the slider. Some people used a side-pocket for line deployment. These looked like tail-pockets except they are mounted on a stabilizer. I’m pretty sure this didn’t do any good. At sixty feet water and concrete are about the same thing . . . so you still want a good canopy over your head. The aspect ratio of 9-cells, like the Nimbus, make symmetrical openings more difficult to achieve. The Nimbus was used for BASE jumping back in the day when there wasn’t any BASE gear. Now, is there a nice vintage round reserve in the container that Nimbus came in? Nick
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>>Of course a dummy was dropped....did you really think it was Burt Lancaster? LOL
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I'll never forget . . . My shift as staff member at Bridge Day (1986) when the first jumper climbs the rail, stops, looks down at me and says, "okay, how do I do this?" I'm glad times have changed . . . Nick
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>>Actually it says he jumped from a crane attached to the tower>Bex
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This has been a long time "dream" of many. Some have come pretty close. The Kockelman brothers had a 260-foot crane (they used it in their bungee jumping business) that we BASE jumped a number of times. Mike Allen sent me a magazine called, "Radio Engineer" back in the 80s. In the classified section there were many towers for sale. They are the result of radio stations going out of business, or upgrading their equipment. They ranged from 500 to 2000-feet and the deal is you hired a company to come take it down and remove it. They weren't really that expensive to buy, but the removing, moving, and re-erecting is quite expensive. If you do hit the lottery (or better, put a business prospectus together and get the right people to invest in it) there's no reason it wouldn't fly, so to speak. There are companies that will build you a new tower to your specifications, elevator and everything. Here’s a company that builds freestanding towers to 500-feet: http://www.glenmartin.com/hstowers.html And some more links to manufactures are here: http://www.dxzone.com/catalog/Manufacturers/Towers_and_Accessories The FAA or FCC couldn’t stop you as not being an actual radio transmitter should have little to do with it. It would be a legitimate business that uses a tower. I almost had Ben Conaster talked into erecting a thousand footer at Perris. He lit up like a bulb when he suddenly realized he could sell jumps without using an airplane. (I suppose he went with the wind tunnel instead
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You're right Space, I wasn't trying to be sequential, but now I realize that's the way I made it look . . . Nick
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Okay Bex, I'm going out to dinner, we'll figure this out when I come back . . . Nick BASE 194
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There will never be a WTC Towers #7. Owen Quinn, WTC #1 Van Refuse, WTC #2 Nic Feteris, WTC #3 Thor Alex, WTC # 4 John Vincent, WTC# 5 I know who it is, but I can't I tell you, WTC #6 If there is ever a Number 7, it'll have an asterisk after it . . . Nick
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#41 Thor Alex Kappfjell, July 7, 1999 Age: 32 Cliff Jump Norway Cliff Strike Thor is reported to have jumped into a fog bank and may have lost his bearings once under canopy and hit the wall. Thor is a popular BASE jumper and is one of six known people to jump from the World Trade Center Towers in New York City. (The other five are Owen Quinn, Van Refuse, Nick Feteris and John Vincent. The sixth is a jumper who chooses to remain anonymous). There will never be a WTC Towers #7. http://www.basefatalities.info/ Nick
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When Ritchie made his 300th BASE jump (back in the day) I asked him what it felt like and he said, "I’m not sure I know, except, this is my 300th and I'm scared . . . so all I know for sure is when you make your 300th BASE jump you'll still be scared." Nick
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>We're all freaks just trying to find our way, hopefully learning as we go.< Yes, Karin, that's right. We are only hampered by those who don't realize the future is just history in reverse . . . Nick D
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>I believe we are TOO EASY on the newbie punks that infiltrate our small sport.< Too Carl Boenish, Jimmy Tyler is a newbie punk. Too Jimmy Tyler, Phil Smith is a newbie punk. Too Phil Smith, Mark Hewitt is a newbie punk. Too Mark Hewitt, Moe Viletto is a newbie punk. Too , is a newbie punk. This sport is bigger and more important than anyone of us, it’s bigger and more important than any particular object, BASE jumping cannot be rented, owned, or sold, and no one has the right to refer to it, even temporarily as, “ours.” BASE jumping is nothing more than humankind’s practical manifestation of its burning desire to fly, to be free, to be more than we are now. And the only thing any of us are local to is planet Earth . . . Nick D
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>Got it! BASE#892.< Congratulations, Brother!!! Nick
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Just a note to any loners out there. San Diego is hot so chill . . . NickD BASE 194
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Hi Tony, Long time no see, Bro . . . Sure, Smitty and Tiny, and the rest are true pioneers, I just put what I could into one post while being general and not thinking about it too much . . . Where are you? Nick
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Hello Tonto, Generally the “sport” of skydiving began after WW II when returning Airborne GI’s found the tedium of civilian life too much for them to handle. They realized that while getting shot at sucked, the jumping part was kinda fun, and when the U.S. Government began dumping surplus parachute equipment onto the civilian market in the 50’s, bingo, a spot is born. Here began the idea of jumping for fun (a concept still lost on most people). At first (late 40’s, early 50’s) these guys would just show up at small crop duster airports and beg for rides. The state of freefall parachuting at the time is tumble, tumble, tumble, dump, spill, spill, spill, crash . . . ! At the time they needed no one to teach them, simply because there wasn’t anything to teach. Real controlled freefall began with the French and is brought to the U.S. by Jacque Istel in the late 50’s. (What morphed into the “Box Man” is originally called the “French Frog” position). Istel, along with Lew Sanborn, are the first to introduce the idea that you didn’t have to do push-ups for three weeks (military airborne training) in order to make a parachute jump and introduced the 3-hour first jump course for civilians in about 1957. This is called the “Telsan” method. However, right up until about the mid-60’s, many people, some who are still jumping today, got hold of parachutes and just did it without any training at all. (Ask Lupe Gonzales how he started . . .) After that, and a bit hard to understand in light of nowaday's training methods, most senior jumpers of today learned on their own. It is called static line training and it was a solo journey through terminal velocity that anyone who did it will never forget. When done with it you felt as if you had truly earned your place in the sky. I’m sure others will chime in here, but that’s it in a nutshell. Of course, the very first parachute jumpers are BASE jumpers long before airplanes are invented, but don’t get me started on that . . . Here’s some links . . . http://projectpi.skydiveworld.com/ http://www.airtrash.com/ This seems funny to say without a radio in my hand but, welcome to skydiving! NickD
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Would anyone with contact with Iiro Seppanen please ask him to contact me at base194@aol.com Thanks, NickD BASE 194
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Tom, if you edit this again, I'm gone from here . . . I stayed out of the moderator fray because I think sites like this should be peer regulated. In that vein, and although I understand your intent, I chose to post where I did (within another thread) for a reason. If I wanted to start a new thread on site burning I would have. I don’t want my posts manipulated in that fashion. I now have to defend an off the cuff remark, and if that’s going to be the way of it here, I’m gone. I don’t want to go into the whole thing right now, but I think we are guilty of taking ourselves and what we are doing too seriously. Very few sites, if any, get burned to the point where they are never jumped again. Time passes, people forget. I really believe we are too paranoid in general, and a more in your face approach to BASE jumping would benefit the sport in the long run. We, all of us, are rebels in the first place, and the best thing to say when cornered is, “Yes, I jumped off that, and if that bothers you, you can go F yourself . . . !” Site protection is not reason enough to eat our young. Nick D BASE 194